In Iraq’s shattered Mosul, voters eye fresh start after Daesh

Iraqis line up to check where they are registered to vote during a parliamentary election in Falluja, Iraq on May 12, 2018. (REUTERS)
Updated 13 May 2018
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In Iraq’s shattered Mosul, voters eye fresh start after Daesh

MOSUL: Voters in the ravaged Iraqi city of Mosul flocked to the polls on Saturday, hoping that parliamentary elections can help turn the page after the devastating war against Daesh.

Daesh “used to repeat to us in the mosques that democracy was a crime against Islam,” said 41-year-old laborer Hareth Mohammad.

“But today I am happy that I have voted.”

While voting appeared sparse in other regions around the country, turnout was strong in the former Iraqi capital of the self-declared Daesh rule.

After seeing off the yoke of years of militant domination, people in the northern city seemed keen to make their voices count.

“We have voted so that they hear us,” said Amina, who like all women in the city was forced to remain indoors under the strict rule of Daesh.

The old center of Mosul — Iraq’s second city — remains in ruins some 10 months after federal forces wrested control from the militants following ferocious street-to-street combat.

Houses are bombed out, corpses still rot under the rubble and unexploded ordnance poses a constant threat. The devastation was just the latest chapter of suffering for a city that has been at the center of so much of the upheaval that has torn Iraq apart since the 2003 US-led invasion.

“Now that we are free from IS (Daesh) we are voting for security,” said Umm Sebhane, 63, a large smile spreading across her face.

After the ferocity of the latest battle, residents in the majority Sunni city are struggling to rebuild their lives and insist their priorities are simple.

“I am voting to choose who will lead the country to stability, security and genuine public services,” said Abu Hassan, dressed in a white robe.

How voting will go across Iraq’s Sunni heartlands — of which Mosul is a key part — is up in the air as the fallout from militant rule has shredded local alliances.

Traditional parties have been tainted by their failure to stand up to Daesh and Shiite politicians — led by Prime Minister Haider Abadi — are hoping to make inroads.

The minority Sunnis once dominated Iraq under dictator Saddam Hussein, but they have played second fiddle since his ouster 15 years ago.

Whether Iraq now manages to reintegrate the community will be crucial for the future of the country, as anger over marginalization helped fuel the rise of Daesh.

Iraqi political expert Ali Al-Zoubeidi said that the vote should help “determine the future” of the Nineveh region where Mosul is located and “improve its relations with the central government.”

In much of Iraq, voters have railed against the fact that the same old figures from the post-Saddam political elite are appearing at the top of the ballots.

But in Mosul and the broader region the situation was starkly different.

This time around some 75 percent of candidates fighting for the 34 seats up for grab in the region are newcomers, showing just how much upheaval there has been.


US imposes sanctions on commanders of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group

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US imposes sanctions on commanders of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group

WASHINGTON: The United States on Thursday imposed sanctions on three commanders of the Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces ​over their role in the 18-month siege and capture of Al-Fashir, accusing the group of carrying out systematic and widespread killings.
The US Treasury Department in a statement announcing the sanctions accused the RSF of perpetrating “a horrific campaign of ethnic killings, torture, starvation, and sexual violence” during the ‌siege and ‌capture of Al-Fashir.
Darfur’s Al-Fashir ​fell ‌to ⁠RSF ​forces in ⁠October 2025 after a long siege that led to mass killings.
The Treasury said that once the city was captured in October, RSF fighters accelerated systematic and widespread killings, detentions, and sexual violence, leaving no survivor, including civilians, unharmed. The Treasury ⁠accused the group of engaging in a ‌systematic campaign to ‌destroy evidence of mass killings by ​burying, burning and disposing ‌of tens of thousands of bodies.
More than 100,000 ‌were estimated to have fled Al-Fashir since late October after the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces took control there following an 18-month siege that plunged the city into ‌famine.
Survivors reported ethnically-motivated mass killings and widespread detentions during and after the ⁠takeover. Many people ⁠remain unaccounted for in Al-Fashir and surrounding areas.
“The United States calls on the Rapid Support Forces to commit to a humanitarian ceasefire immediately. We will not tolerate this ongoing campaign of terror and senseless killing in Sudan,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in the statement.
Among those targeted by the Treasury on Thursday were an RSF brigadier general the department said filmed himself ​killing unarmed civilians, as ​well as a major general and RSF field commander.